SOSEScript: CIVweatherright.php5 failed executing with the following error:
Error on line 16 position 1: Undefined property: stdClass::$location
Error on line 16 position 1: Trying to get property of non-object
Error on line 17 position 1: Undefined property: stdClass::$current_observation
Error on line 17 position 1: Trying to get property of non-object
Error on line 18 position 1: Undefined property: stdClass::$current_observation
Error on line 18 position 1: Trying to get property of non-object
Error on line 19 position 1: Undefined property: stdClass::$current_observation
Error on line 19 position 1: Trying to get property of non-object
Error on line 20 position 1: Undefined property: stdClass::$current_observation
Error on line 20 position 1: Trying to get property of non-object
Error on line 21 position 1: Undefined property: stdClass::$current_observation
Error on line 21 position 1: Trying to get property of non-object
Error on line 22 position 1: Undefined property: stdClass::$current_observation
Error on line 22 position 1: Trying to get property of non-object
Error on line 23 position 1: Undefined property: stdClass::$current_observation
Error on line 23 position 1: Trying to get property of non-object

Ohioan restores green goblin head from horror film

PIKETON — A southern Ohio collector has restored an 8-foot goblin head to its glossy green glory, decades after the prop’s glowing eyes were used to signal imminent attacks in a Stephen King horror film.

The fiberglass face, which had been attached to a truck in the 1986 movie “Maximum Overdrive,” spent years being bumped by the lawn mower and climbed by children in Tim Shockey’s Piketon backyard before he decided to fix it up as a personal project. He began documenting it on Facebook last year and turned it into a moneymaking venture when he started getting messages from fans of the film, The Columbus Dispatch reported.

“I never knew this market existed,” said Shockey, who now takes the prop to horror-film conventions and sells photos of fans with the eerie green face.

To help pay for the fix-up, he sold dust sanded from the prop as $10 vials of “Goblin Dust” online.

“My wife (Janie) said, ‘There’s no way anyone will buy that,’” he said. “By the time I went to bed, I had sold three of them.”

Despite the movie’s limited success, one explanation for the interest in the goblin might be that horror fans tend to be loyal, said filmmaker Lucas Ostrowski, an assistant professor at Bowling Green State University.

“If you have a key prop that’s iconic, it doesn’t matter how obscure the movie is, because fans latch onto an iconic image,” he said.

Shockey is getting a glimpse of that.

“It has opened up a whole new world to me,” the 54-year-old sign company owner said.

Shockey, a movie fan himself, bought the head in 1987 from someone who’d purchased it at a junkyard. He displayed it at his Waverly video store until he sold the place in 1992 and moved the goblin to his property.

It’s among 600-plus Hollywood movie props he owns and sometimes sells. The items also include a “Scream 4” mask signed by director Wes Craven and a football used by Adam Sandler in the 2005 remake of “The Longest Yard.”